797 N.E.2d 520 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2003
{¶ 2} Brooks and Batts moved for a summary judgment on the basis that they are immune from plaintiff's suit because of provisions of the Workers' Compensation Act which provides immunity to employers and fellow employees pursuant to R.C.
{¶ 3} The trial court granted summary judgment to both defendants finding that they were entitled to immunity under R.C.
{¶ 4} Plaintiff also sought recovery against defendant-appellee, St. Paul Fire Marine Insurance Company ("St. Paul"), on the basis that uninsured ("UM") and underinsured ("UIM") motorist coverage was applicable under their policy covering Batts and that Freeman is an insured person to which the coverage applied. St. Paul moved for summary judgment on the basis that the policy limited UM/UIM coverage on the vehicle to $25,000. The trial court granted summary judgment to St. Paul and plaintiff appeals that judgment as well.
{¶ 5} Plaintiff asserts the following assignments of error:
1. The trial court erred to the substantial prejudice of the plaintiff-appellant in granting summary judgment to the defendants-appellees, Inez Brooks and Batts Temporary Services on the ground that they were immune from liability.
2. The trial court erred to the substantial prejudice of the plaintiff-appellant in granting summary judgment to the defendants-appellees St. Paul Fire Marine Insurance Company on the ground that, even though the policy issued by the defendant-appellee contained UM, UIM coverage by operation of law the policy still validly excluded the vehicles owned by the named insured from the definition of an uninsured or underinsured motor vehicle.
{¶ 6} Because the assignments of error arise out of the trial court's ruling on a motion for summary judgment, we review the disposition independently and without deference to the trial court's determination. Brown v. Scioto Cty. Bd. of Commrs. (1993),
{¶ 7} Batts has claimed immunity from damages at common law for Freeman's death based upon R.C.
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Employers who comply with section
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No employee of any employer, as defined in division (B) of section
{¶ 8} Brooks and Batts seek summary judgment based upon the application of these immunity sections of the Revised Code claiming that the death of Freeman occurred in the course of or arising out of the deceased employee's employment. Freeman's administrator, on the other hand, claims that Freeman's death did not arise out of his employment. Thus, plaintiff seeks partial summary judgment consisting of a declaration by the court that neither Batts nor Brooks is entitled to immunity from the common-law damage suit.
{¶ 9} For assignment of error one, the only disputed issue with respect to immunity is whether Freeman's death occurred within the scope of and arising out of his employment. *375
{¶ 10} There is no genuine issue of material fact concerning the issue of immunity. The deposition of Sean Fore, vice-president of Batts, is not in dispute concerning the status of Freeman during his employment with Batts at the time of the accident herein. Batts provides light industrial temporary labor throughout Ohio and elsewhere. They have an office in Columbus and four other Ohio cities. Airborne, a business located at Wilmington, Ohio, is a client of Batts. Airborne is a parcel package mover who operates three shifts and frequently needs temporary labor, particularly during the night shift. Batts entered into a contract with Airborne to supply temporary labor consisting of 10 to 60 persons at various times. Labor is supplied from the Columbus office at times, as well as from Dayton and other Ohio offices.
{¶ 11} Batts hires hourly employees paying them around $7 an hour to provide this day labor. Both Freeman and Brooks, as well as the other 13 occupants of the van, were employed on this basis. Airborne paid Batts $11 an hour for the actual time that each Batts' employee was at Airborne. In other words, Freeman and other workers were paid only for the actual time that they were engaged in labor at Airborne. The client maintains time cards for them, which provided the basis for their hourly pay from Batts. The employees were not paid for time spent in transportation from their home to Airborne regardless of how they got there, which was either by driving themselves or by taking a van from Batts' office. Airborne paid fringe benefits costs, such as workers' compensation coverage.
{¶ 12} As stated before, employees could drive their own vehicle or arrange for their own transportation to Wilmington where Airborne was located. Batts provided an additional choice by maintaining four 15-passenger vans to transport workers. If a daily worker chose to take the van, he or she paid Batts $4 for round-trip transportation from the office of Batts located on Livingston Avenue in Columbus. The workers arranged for their own transportation to the office. They were not compensated for times spent during either type of transportation and agreed to have the costs of the round-trip van transportation deducted from their daily wages if they chose to use the van. Generally, they were paid at the end of each day. This was the situation that applied regardless of where the actual work or client was located. Freeman had worked at about four different job locations during this relative brief tenure as a daily worker with Batts, generally all within a relatively close area to Columbus. The use of Columbus workers in Wilmington occurred because closer offices could not supply enough temporary workers. Batts' vice-president testified in his deposition that the offer of transportation by the van was strictly permissive and offered as a service to the daily workers who otherwise would have to arrange their own transportation.
{¶ 13} The trial court, in its decision, analyzed cases pertinent to the issue of whether Freeman's death occurred within the scope of and arising out his employment. That analysis is as follows: *376
In Ruckman v. Cubby Drilling Co., Inc. (1998),
Relying on the coming-and-going rule, Plaintiff herein argues that Clarence Freeman's injuries did not occur in the course of and arising out of his employment by Defendant Batts. Generally, an employee with a fixed place of employment who is injured while traveling to or from his place of employment is not entitled to participate in the Workers' Compensation fund. MTD Products, Inc. v. Robatin (1991),
An employee may avoid the force of the coming-and-going rule where he can nevertheless demonstrate that he received an injury in the course of and arising out of his employment. Id. at 120, citing MTD Products,
Before it may conclude that Defendants Batts and Brooks are entitled to immunity under R.C.
"If an employee's injury occurs in the course of his employment, yet fails the Lord three-part test for causation, a fixed-situs employee may, nevertheless, demonstrate the required causal connection between employment and injury under the special hazard rule of causation." Ruckman,
In Ruckman, the Ohio Supreme Court held that multiple factors combined to make the riggers' travel to temporary drilling sites a special hazard of their employment. Id. Those factors included the temporary nature and constantly changing location of the riggers' fixed work sites and the distance of the riggers' commutes to the remote work sites. Although Plaintiff argues that none of the factors that compelled the Supreme Court to apply the special hazard rule in Ruckman are present herein, this Court finds that each of the factors also weighs in favor of the conclusion that the special hazard exception applies to the instant case.
Like the Cubby riggers, Batts's employees' work sites changed frequently. (Fore Dep. pp. 12, 20). Mr. Freeman's pay stubs indicate that Mr. Freeman worked for Batts in at least four different locations other than Airborne in the month prior to his death. (See Fore Dep. pp. 37-38; Exh. 2, 3). Batts's employees did not know the location of future assignments and, unlike the *378 typical fixed-situs employee, were unable to fix their commute in relation to the remote work sites. In Ruckman, the Ohio Supreme Court stated:
"For most employees, commuting distance to a fixed work site is largely a personal choice. Any increased risk due to a longer commute is due more to the employee's choice of where he or she wants to live than the employer's choice of where it wants to locate its business. Accordingly, it is usually not the employment relationship that exposes an employee to the greater risk associated with a long commute."
In the instant case, although Batts' employees could control the distance between their homes and Batts' dispatching office, where the employees received their job assignments and time tickets for the day, they were unable to control the commuting distance to the remote work sites to which Batts assigned them. Mr. Freeman was not injured on his commute from home to the Batts dispatch office, but on his commute from the Batts dispatch office, where Mr. Freeman had been given his job assignment, to the remote location where Mr. Freeman was to fulfill that assignment. Here, like in Ruckman, the employment relationship dictated that the Batts employees undertake daily and lengthy commutes from the dispatch office to remote work sites, thereby significantly increasing their exposure to traffic risks associated with highway travel. Accordingly, this Court finds that Mr. Freeman's travel to remote work sites constituted a special hazard of his employment, involving risk distinctive in nature or quantitatively greater than the risk the general public faced during commutes to and from work. Thus, the Court finds that Mr. Freeman's death arose out of his employment with Batts.
{¶ 14} We agree with the trial court's analysis, as conceded by plaintiff, that Freeman's death occurred in the course of his employment, and that there was not a sufficient causal connection between Freeman's death and his employment. The critical issue, however, is whether a fixed situs employee (as Freeman was) in relation to his employment at Airborne had the sufficient causal connection between employment and injury under the "special hazard rule of causation." Ruckman, supra, at 124. Given the special hazard rule, an employee is entitled to workers' compensation benefits when the employment creates a special hazard and the injuries are sustained because of that hazard. Littlefield v. Pillsbury Co. (1983),
{¶ 15} It seems paradoxical that Batts, who authored the travel arrangements to avoid bearing the costs of the temporary workers drawing wages or being compensated until the workers arrived and signed in at the client's workplace, now seeks to undo their own handiwork, at least in part, by arguing that, in doing so, they placed the workers under a special hazard of injury and, thus, the employees *379 were entitled to workers' compensation under the Ruckman rule. Of course, their real object is to obtain immunity from common-law liability. Had the accident and death been caused by the negligence of a third-party, one can rest assured that the arguments would be reversed, as in the Ruckman case, and its progeny, where the workers' goal is to recover workers' compensation benefits and the employer's goal is to avoid paying workers' compensation.
{¶ 16} But such is life and law where self-interest frequently takes precedence over principle.
{¶ 17} Nevertheless, it is our obligation to determine the status of Freeman, regardless of the transient circumstances and whose ox is being gored.
{¶ 18} As stated before, we are charged to review the disposition independently without deference to the trial court's decision. The sole issue based on Ruckman, supra, is whether Freeman's transportation arrangement created a special hazard causing his death. If Freeman was exposed only to the commuting hazards common to the public, then under the coming-and-going rule, the requisite causal connection between injury and the employment does not exist.
{¶ 19} The circumstances for finding a greater hazard of commuting are substantially weaker in this case than in the Ruckman case. In Ruckman, workers were sent from their homes to drill sites a substantial distance away. They were paid a per diem based on the miles the drill site was located from the home office. Their commutes involved long distances of highway travel to remote sites, often with overnight stays. That situation involved far more exposure to highway risks than encountered by daily commuters.
{¶ 20} In this case, the longest commute appeared to be one hour or less, something experienced daily by many members of the public, Batts' temporary workers, like Freeman, were free to accept or decline any job. Since the temporary workers received no pay, only an expense, for transportation, it seems obvious that their commute time and expenses must be limited to short distances. The workers were being paid a low hourly rate of not more than $7.00 an hour. The economics clearly indicate that the workers, like Freeman, would rarely, if ever, be used for long distance trips.
{¶ 21} In the case of Barber v. Buckeye Masonry Construction Co. (2001),
{¶ 22} The case herein virtually parallels Barber, except that Freeman chose to pay to take the van rather than provide his own transportation. We find no "special hazard" not common to the public in general. Workers' compensation coverage did not apply because there was no casual connection.
{¶ 23} Plaintiff's first assignment of error is sustained. Defendants do not have immunity since the accident did not arise out of Freeman's employment.
{¶ 24} Plaintiff's second assignment of error is overruled. St. Paul provided liability insurance in the sum of $1,000,000 that apply to defendants for damages arising from Freeman's death. Therefore, defendants were neither uninsured nor underinsured.
{¶ 25} Plaintiff's first assignment of error is sustained and the second assignment of error is overruled. The judgment of the trial court is reversed and this case is remanded to the trial court for further procedure consistent with this opinion.
Judgment reversed and remanded.
PETREE, P.J., and BOWMAN, JJ., concur.
McCORMAC, J., retired of the Tenth Appellate District, assigned to active duty under authority of Section